In his inaugural address President Robert J. Zimmer
focused on the University’s enduring values—values, he said,
that can be sustained only by anticipating and embracing appropriate change.

On January 2, 1893, the University of Chicago convened its opening convocation—Convocation
Number 1. As you will discover in your program, this is Convocation 487,
so quite a bit has happened here since that winter day in 1893. If we take
ourselves back to the University in its early years, we would find many
major differences from what we observe today. We would see remarkably different
course offerings, research agendas, institutional organization, educational
programs, and social, political, and global environments. We would discover
familiar buildings but find them situated within a very different physical
landscape, in a barely recognizable city and urban environment. We would
not see the vast array of now familiar schools, departments, centers, institutes,
intellectual endeavors, student activities, and community connections that
is the focus of abundant energy and enthusiasm today.

And yet many of us connected to this university feel that we might just
as easily have been there—that going back to the University in its
early days, or in fact at any time since its inception, we would know unmistakably
that we were at the University of Chicago.

Why is this? The University of Chicago, from its very inception,
has been driven by a singular focus on inquiry—with a firm belief
in the value of open, rigorous, and intense inquiry and a common understanding
that this must be the defining feature of this university. Everything about
the University of Chicago that we recognize as distinctive flows from this
commitment: our belief that argumentation rather than deference
is the route to clarity; our insistence that arguments stand or fall on
their merits, not the background, position, or fame of the proponent; our
flexible organization that fosters rigorous and imaginative analysis of
complex problems from multiple perspectives; our education that embeds
learning in a culture of intense inquiry and analysis, thereby offering
the most empowering education to students irrespective of the path they
may ultimately take; our commitment to attract the most original agenda-setting
faculty and students who can most benefit from and contribute to our environment;
and our recognition that our important contributions to society rest on
the power of our ideas and the openness of our environment to developing
and testing ideas.

These enduring values and fundamental principles of the University have
shaped our culture and have informed generations of faculty, students,
and administrators. They are so visible, so deeply embedded, and they so
define our environment, in the past as well as the present, that with all
the tangible changes in the University between Convocations 1 and 487,
we believe we would recognize this university at any time in its history. At
the University of Chicago, we know who we are as an institution.

The words “open,” “rigorous,” and “intense” are
easy to say, but one should not underestimate the challenges in actually
creating, preserving, and enhancing such an environment. There is scant
evidence that open, rigorous, and intense inquiry is the natural state
of humankind. Openness alone is difficult. Even in institutions that prize
it, sustaining openness is very demanding of members of a community. It
requires listening when one is full of passionate conviction, a willingness
to challenge one’s fundamental assumptions, and respecting the arguments
of those with whom you strongly disagree. Additionally, it entails fostering,
as a community, freedom of thought, expression, and argument when many
forces, intentional or not, may align to create chilling effects.

Difficult as it is to achieve, being open is not enough. One needs the
intellectual and emotional fortitude for rigor, the intensity to pursue
argument relentlessly, and the imagination to see connections that transcend
accepted understanding. It is a special environment in which these are
the primary values, and it is a very special university that embraces these
values as its core and that has succeeded in sustaining and enhancing these
values over its lifetime.

While these are large principles, they play out in the work of individuals
in the University community day in and day out. How the faculty approach
their scholarship and teaching, how the students approach their education,
how the administration and staff approach their responsibilities, how the
trustees provide their oversight and support, how the alumni connect to
the University and what they value about their experience, how our friends
understand the distinctive contribution the University makes: the actions
and decisions of the University community, as individuals and as a collective,
reaffirm and renew our fundamental principles every day.

The greatest long-term challenges to this environment are the inevitable
and always formidable countervailing pressures of ease, accommodation,
and complacency.

Thus, the University’s ability to remain steadfastly committed to
sustaining its values is a tribute to all those who have been part of and
contributed to the University community over the years. It is a legacy
whose value we must always reaffirm, and it is a community that I am proud
and enthusiastic to rejoin.

The culture these values have created, which permeates the foundations
of every one of our schools, divisions, and the College, has had a profound
impact because of the power of the ideas generated by our faculty and students.
The Chicago name has been synonymous with defining academic disciplines,
schools, and modes of thought, and the University has had a transformative
impact on economics; science; energy production; medicine; law; business;
religion; policy; historical, cultural, and literary analysis; and much
more. It also has had a profound impact on individuals who have been connected
to the University. We have trained College students, graduate students,
and professional students with intensity and rigor, and for generations
they have been empowered by this education and way of analyzing our world
to become leaders in virtually every area of endeavor. This impact—on
scholarship, on society, on individuals—is a clear demonstration
of the power of the idea of the University of Chicago itself and the principles
and values that guide us.

Now I have known this about the University of Chicago for a long time,
but it has a particular salience for me right now. One of the things
you hear as you become a president of a university is how complicated the
job is. Everyone is quick to point out that there are so many constituencies—faculty,
students, staff, trustees, parents, alumni, friends, patients, the community,
the city, the federal government—and so many tasks—ensuring
academic programs flourish, recruiting the best faculty and students, building
buildings, raising money, meeting with alumni, representing and protecting
the University, dealing with globalization and changing technology, addressing
diversity, working with the community and the federal government, balancing
the budget, overseeing management not only of what is usually identified
with a university but in our case also a major hospital, a major national
laboratory, the largest academic press in the country, a major pre-K–12
private school, a charter school with three campuses, and an array of important
institutional and personal relationships in the city and beyond.

While it is true that these are all features of this presidency, and in
fact very important features, none captures its most central role. My core
responsibility as president of the University of Chicago is—and has
to be—to ensure that the University realizes its enduring values
and fundamental principles in the most powerful and lasting way possible.

So let me turn to the future, by first looking back again to see the lessons
of change since 1893 in the context of enduring values.

With the clarity of enduring values and principles, the University evolved
through the often tumultuous transformations of the last century. Many
at the University seized the opportunities and confronted the challenges
presented by cultural, social, scientific, intellectual, political, institutional,
and technological change. This includes the legendary figures who visibly
forged the University’s history, but also many whose contributions
have a quieter place in legend. Their collective contributions have brought
us to where we are today.

What is the lesson of this history of a university with such a clear set
of enduring values? It is not that our predecessors discovered the right
shape of the University once and for all, but rather that the University
has flourished because those who preceded us acted with boldness, imagination,
and discipline. They advanced the University and its values for the long
run by making changes within the context of the opportunities and challenges
of their time. Enduring values have been the guide to action, not a sanctuary
for complacency. Enduring values have not been, and should not be, confused
with enduring answers.

It now falls upon us, the University of Chicago community of the present
day, to act within the context of our enduring values with the same boldness,
imagination, and discipline to seize the opportunities and confront the
challenges of our time. To sustain enduring values, we must anticipate
and embrace appropriate change.

The opportunities we now face inspire imagination, though the challenges
are significant. There are many questions we must answer, and the
entire University academic community will need to be involved. For example:

How should we bring to bear our analytic capacity, history, and culture—so
conducive to confronting problems from a variety of perspectives—in
new and imaginative ways to contribute to understanding the complex social,
economic, cultural, and intellectual problems of our times?

How do we participate in and lead the remarkable ongoing transformations
in science—the revolution in biomedicine, the advent of computation
as a conceptual and technical tool, and the breakdown of the boundary between
science as the study of natural phenomena and engineering as the study
of man-made artifacts?

How do we advance the arts on campus and articulate the relationship between
critical analysis, performance and production, and the connection to the
city?

How should our college, graduate, and professional education evolve to
reflect shifting paradigms of inquiry across the disciplines?

How do we ensure that our scholarly community is comprised of a rich mix
of individuals who, through their own diverse experience, background, and
viewpoints, contribute to the intellectually challenging culture of the
University?

How do we continue to support our graduate students, who are such an important
component of our intellectual culture?

How do we continue to enhance the programs in the College, which has seen
such a remarkable renaissance, and continue to ensure access to a Chicago
education independent of family financial capacity?

How do we benefit most from and contribute most to our partnerships—with
Argonne, the Field Museum, the Museum of Science and Industry, the Chicago
Public Schools, Howard Hughes Medical Institute, and others?

How do we approach international aspects of education in the context of
globalization and build upon the Graduate School of Business programs and
facilities in Singapore and London, and our University facility and programs
in Paris?

What is our strategy for simultaneously enhancing clinical medical care
and biomedical research?
How should our relationship with the South Side community, the city, and
the region evolve?

How do we communicate better with our friends, alumni, and external constituents
to describe our culture and our achievements?

How do we generate the resources necessary to support all we must do in
order for the University of Chicago to remain a distinctive leading institution
and advance our capabilities for the future?

Our responses to these and other questions will shape the legacy we leave
as a community. As we consider these and other questions, we know
that the nature of this university demands that our answers always echo
our enduring values and fundamental principles and display a level of ambition
for the future that reflects our history of achievement. For this, we must
be willing to take bold steps.

Every member of this university community has benefited from the variety
of important contributions of those who preceded us. To respond to the
questions and challenges of our time, to successfully articulate and implement
an ambitious agenda for the University, every component of the University
community must contribute to this effort, so those who follow us will benefit
because of our work.

Twenty-four-hundred years ago, the Greek historian Thucydides described
his own work as designed “not to win the applause of the moment,
but as a possession for all time.” Let us take Thucydides’ challenge
to himself upon ourselves and approach the legacy that has been entrusted
to us and the future of the University of Chicago with equal aspiration.